Fred Julsing Jr.

(12 March 1942 - 15 January 2005, The Netherlands)

Ukkie

Fred Julsing Jr. was born in The Hague as the son of painter and illustrator Fred Julsing Sr., who drew a couple of comic books under the pseudonym Larry Morgan in 1948. As a very young artist, he published his first cartoons in the magazine Autovisie (1958), and two years later, he won the prestigious Jacob Marisprijs, The Hague's municipal award for art, for his lithographies. Immediately after that, he decided to start investigating the other love of his - the comic strip. He did so at the Toonder studios, which he joined in the early 1960s.

Tom Poes en de Hupbloemerij (by Fred Julsing & Marten Toonder, 1968)

After assisting Thé Tjong-Khing on 'Student Tijloos' and Jan Wesseling on 'Koning Hollewijn', Julsing became Marten Toonder's closest assistant in the production of the famous 'Tom Poes' newspaper strip. For six years he took care of the layouts and the sketches on that strip, while Toonder himself did corrections and inks.

De Broertjes Samovarof & Co (Pep #44, 1974)

At the studios, he has also worked on the series 'Kappie' and 'Panda', as well as his own comic 'Komkommertje en Martien', that appeared in the advertising magazine Journaal 2000 in 1970. In addition, he did comics and illustrations for Baljuw, Sjors and Ariadne, while his first personal comic story 'Klinsklansklandere, van de ene bil op de andere' was published by the Dutch Society for Sexual Reform in 1968.

André van Duin

After this educational period the time had come to start a career under his own name. He joined the magazine Pep in 1970, and after some 'Pepspotters', he came up with the series 'Wellington Wish' (1971-1973) and 'De Broertjes Samovarof & Co' (1974-1975). Furthermore, Julsing was an editor and lay-out designer for comics information magazine Stripschrift (1972-1973), a political cartoonist for Het Vrije Volk, and the author of a comic strip about Dutch comedian André van Duin for Veronicagids (1975).

Tuimel en Ich

Following the disappearance of the magazine (Sjors and Pep continued as one magazine under the title Eppo in 1975), Julsing intensified his production for the magazines of the publishing house Malmberg: Okki, Jippo, Taptoe and Primo. He had already done illustration work for Malmberg's school magazines, but between 1977 and 1980 he created longer and popular comic stories like 'De schat van het landje' (Jippo, 1978), 'Robinson' (Taptoe, 1977-78) and the first installment of 'Witte's Dagboek' (Taptoe 1979-80).

Het Blauwe Licht

Julsing made new episodes of 'Witte's Dagboek' in cooperation with Theo Steeman for Donald Duck weekly in 1986 and 1989. Julsing cooperated with the Malmberg magazines until 1993, and especially his adaptations of fairytales in the 1980s got him praise and even an award in 1985.

Witte's Dagboek (Donald Duck #29, 1986)

Julsing additionally made illustrations for text stories in Donald Duck, the Spanish Cat stories by Hans Dorrestijn in Het Parool and editorial illustrations in Wij Jonge Ouders and Vrij Nederland. Another comic strip of the period was 'De Familie Uittentuis' for ANWB Kampioen (1983-84). But his best-known creation became the baby 'Ukkie', whose adventures he created for the women's weekly Margreet between 1983 and 1990. The character was also the mascot of a large line of food products in the 1990s, for which Julsing also produced many illustrations.

Ukkie

Another remarkable comic by Julsing is 'Tuimel & Professor Ich', that originally appeared in Sjors & Sjimmie Stripblad, and was published in book format in 1989. Although only one book appeared, the Professor Ich character gained a wider reputation through the chain of comic book stores of the same name that started in the 1990s. In the early 1990s, Julsing also wrote three episodes of the comic series 'Fanteasy' for his pupil Jeroen Steehouwer.

Pietsie & Pop (Taptoe, 1993)

In 1992 Fred Julsing barely escaped from the inferno caused by a crashed Martinair DC-10 in the south of Portugal. Realizing that this event represented the turning point in his life, he withdrew in order to "reinvent himself". After that, everything in his life changed, and he moved to California. His final comic strip was 'Pietsie & Pop en de Zonen van O' in Taptoe (1993).

From: Tien jaar net niet dood

He began making spiritual paintings and dealt with the experience of the disaster in 'Tien Jaren Net Niet Dood', an illustrated chronicle of the plain crash that was published in Het Parool in 2002. By then, Julsing planned a comeback. New work popped up on websites, he created the character of 'Beertje Bertje' and he did some advertising artwork. Unfortunately, Fred Julsing died in January, 2005, at the age of 62.

Lambiek will always be grateful to Julsing for illustrating the letter "W" in our encylopedia book, 'Wordt Vervolgd - Stripleksikon der Lage Landen', published in 1979.